Beneficial effects of silymarin on estrogen-induced cholestasis in the rat: A study in vivo and in isolated hepatocyte couplets

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Abstract

The effect of silymarin (SIL) on 17α-ethynylestradiol (EE)-induced cholestasis was evaluated in rats. EE (5 mg/kg, subcutaneously, daily, for 5 days) decreased both the bile-salt-dependent and the bile-salt-independent fractions of the bile flow. The decrease in the former was associated to a reduction in the bile salt pool size (-58%), and this effect was completely prevented by SIL. This compound also counteracted the inhibitory effect induced by EE on HCO3− but not glutathione output, 2 major determinants of the bile-salt-independent bile flow. EE decreased the secretory rate maximum (SRM) of tauroursodeoxycholate, (-71%) and bromosulfophthalein (BSP; -60%), as well as the expression of the BSP canalicular carrier, mrp2; SIL failed to increase mrp2 expression, and had only a marginal beneficial effect on both tauroursodeoxycholate and BSP SRM values. However, the two-compartment model-based kinetic constant for BSP canalicular transfer was significantly improved by SIL (+262%). SIL decreased rather than increased CYP3A4, the cytochrome P450 isoenzyme involved in the oxidative metabolism of EE, and had no inhibitory effect on the UDP-glucuronosyltrasferase isoforms involved in the formation of its 17β-glucuronidated, more cholestatic metabolite. Pretreatment of isolated rat hepatocyte couplets with silibinin, the major, active component of SIL, counteracted the estradiol 17β-glucuronide-induced decrease in the percentage of couplets secreting apically the fluorescent bile acid analogue, cholyl-lysyl-fluorescein. These results show that SIL protects against EE-induced cholestasis by normalizing mainly the decrease in the bile salt pool size and HCO3− output, and probably by counteracting the cholestatic effect of its cholestatic, glucuronidated metabolite.

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Crocenzi, F. A., Sánchez Pozzi, E. J., Pellegrino, J. M., Favre, C. O., Rodríguez Garay, E. A., Mottino, A. D., … Roma, M. G. (2001). Beneficial effects of silymarin on estrogen-induced cholestasis in the rat: A study in vivo and in isolated hepatocyte couplets. Hepatology, 34(2), 329–339. https://doi.org/10.1053/jhep.2001.26520

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